1,046 research outputs found
Strain analysis of multiferroic BiFeO3-CoFe2O4 nanostructures by Raman scattering
We report a Raman scattering investigation of columnar BiFeO3-CoFe2O4
(BFO-CFO) epitaxial thin film nanostructures, where BFO pillars are embedded in
a CFO matrix. The feasibility of a strain analysis is illustrated through an
investigation of two nanostructures with different BFO-CFO ratios. We show that
the CFO matrix presents the same strain state in both nanostructures, while the
strain state of the BFO pillars depends on the BFO/CFO ratio with an increasing
tensile strain along the out-of-plane direction with decreasing BFO content.
Our results demonstrate that Raman scattering allows monitoring strain states
in complex 3D multiferroic pillar/matrix composites.Comment: revised version submitted to Appl. Phys. Let
Self-consistent solution for the polarized vacuum in a no-photon QED model
We study the Bogoliubov-Dirac-Fock model introduced by Chaix and Iracane
({\it J. Phys. B.}, 22, 3791--3814, 1989) which is a mean-field theory deduced
from no-photon QED. The associated functional is bounded from below. In the
presence of an external field, a minimizer, if it exists, is interpreted as the
polarized vacuum and it solves a self-consistent equation.
In a recent paper math-ph/0403005, we proved the convergence of the iterative
fixed-point scheme naturally associated with this equation to a global
minimizer of the BDF functional, under some restrictive conditions on the
external potential, the ultraviolet cut-off and the bare fine
structure constant . In the present work, we improve this result by
showing the existence of the minimizer by a variational method, for any cut-off
and without any constraint on the external field.
We also study the behaviour of the minimizer as goes to infinity
and show that the theory is "nullified" in that limit, as predicted first by
Landau: the vacuum totally kills the external potential. Therefore the limit
case of an infinite cut-off makes no sense both from a physical and
mathematical point of view.
Finally, we perform a charge and density renormalization scheme applying
simultaneously to all orders of the fine structure constant , on a
simplified model where the exchange term is neglected.Comment: Final version, to appear in J. Phys. A: Math. Ge
A new approach to the modelling of local defects in crystals: the reduced Hartree-Fock case
This article is concerned with the derivation and the mathematical study of a
new mean-field model for the description of interacting electrons in crystals
with local defects. We work with a reduced Hartree-Fock model, obtained from
the usual Hartree-Fock model by neglecting the exchange term. First, we recall
the definition of the self-consistent Fermi sea of the perfect crystal, which
is obtained as a minimizer of some periodic problem, as was shown by Catto, Le
Bris and Lions. We also prove some of its properties which were not mentioned
before. Then, we define and study in details a nonlinear model for the
electrons of the crystal in the presence of a defect. We use formal analogies
between the Fermi sea of a perturbed crystal and the Dirac sea in Quantum
Electrodynamics in the presence of an external electrostatic field. The latter
was recently studied by Hainzl, Lewin, S\'er\'e and Solovej, based on ideas
from Chaix and Iracane. This enables us to define the ground state of the
self-consistent Fermi sea in the presence of a defect. We end the paper by
proving that our model is in fact the thermodynamic limit of the so-called
supercell model, widely used in numerical simulations.Comment: Final version, to appear in Comm. Math. Phy
Magnetic properties of the honeycomb oxide NaCoTeO
We have studied the magnetic properties of NaCoTeO, which
features a honeycomb lattice of magnetic Co ions, through macroscopic
characterization and neutron diffraction on a powder sample. We have shown that
this material orders in a zig-zag antiferromagnetic structure. In addition to
allowing a linear magnetoelectric coupling, this magnetic arrangement displays
very peculiar spatial magnetic correlations, larger in the honeycomb planes
than between the planes, which do not evolve with the temperature. We have
investigated this behavior by Monte Carlo calculations using the
-- model on a honeycomb lattice with a small interplane
interaction. Our model reproduces the experimental neutron structure factor,
although its absence of temperature evolution must be due to additional
ingredients, such as chemical disorder or quantum fluctuations enhanced by the
proximity to a phase boundary.Comment: 9 pages, 13 figure
Phonons in the multiferroic langasite BaNbFeSiO : evidences for symmetry breaking
The chiral langasite BaNbFeSiO is a multiferroic
compound. While its magnetic order below T=27 K is now well characterised,
its polar order is still controversial. We thus looked at the phonon spectrum
and its temperature dependence to unravel possible crystal symmetry breaking.
We combined optical measurements (both infrared and Raman spectroscopy) with ab
initio calculations and show that signatures of a polar state are clearly
present in the phonon spectrum even at room temperature. An additional symmetry
lowering occurs below 120~K as seen from emergence of softer phonon modes in
the THz range. These results confirm the multiferroic nature of this langasite
and open new routes to understand the origin of the polar state
Perspectives on Human Genetic Variation from the HapMap Project
The completion of the International HapMap Project marks the start of a new phase in human genetics. The aim of the project was to provide a resource that facilitates the design of efficient genome-wide association studies, through characterising patterns of genetic variation and linkage disequilibrium in a sample of 270 individuals across four geographical populations. In total, over one million SNPs have been typed across these genomes, providing an unprecedented view of human genetic diversity. In this review we focus on what the HapMap project has taught us about the structure of human genetic variation and the fundamental molecular and evolutionary processes that shape it
Existence of global-in-time solutions to a generalized Dirac-Fock type evolution equation
We consider a generalized Dirac-Fock type evolution equation deduced from
no-photon Quantum Electrodynamics, which describes the self-consistent
time-evolution of relativistic electrons, the observable ones as well as those
filling up the Dirac sea. This equation has been originally introduced by Dirac
in 1934 in a simplified form. Since we work in a Hartree-Fock type
approximation, the elements describing the physical state of the electrons are
infinite rank projectors. Using the Bogoliubov-Dirac-Fock formalism, introduced
by Chaix-Iracane ({\it J. Phys. B.}, 22, 3791--3814, 1989), and recently
established by Hainzl-Lewin-Sere, we prove the existence of global-in-time
solutions of the considered evolution equation.Comment: 12 pages; more explanations added, some final (minor) corrections
include
Construction of the Pauli-Villars-regulated Dirac vacuum in electromagnetic fields
Using the Pauli-Villars regularization and arguments from convex analysis, we
construct solutions to the classical time-independent Maxwell equations in
Dirac's vacuum, in the presence of small external electromagnetic sources. The
vacuum is not an empty space, but rather a quantum fluctuating medium which
behaves as a nonlinear polarizable material. Its behavior is described by a
Dirac equation involving infinitely many particles. The quantum corrections to
the usual Maxwell equations are nonlinear and nonlocal. Even if photons are
described by a purely classical electromagnetic field, the resulting vacuum
polarization coincides to first order with that of full Quantum
Electrodynamics.Comment: Final version to appear in Arch. Rat. Mech. Analysi
Directly characterizing the relative strength and momentum dependence of electron-phonon coupling using resonant inelastic x-ray scattering
The coupling between lattice and charge degrees of freedom in condensed
matter materials is ubiquitous and can often result in interesting properties
and ordered phases, including conventional superconductivity, charge density
wave order, and metal-insulator transitions. Angle-resolved photoemission
spectroscopy and both neutron and non-resonant x-ray scattering serve as
effective probes for determining the behavior of appropriate, individual
degrees of freedom -- the electronic structure and lattice excitation, or
phonon dispersion, respectively. However, each provides less direct information
about the mutual coupling between the degrees of freedom, usual through
self-energy effects, which tend to renormalize and broaden spectral features
precisely where the coupling is strong, impacting ones ability to quantitively
characterize the coupling. Here we demonstrate that resonant inelastic x-ray
scattering, or RIXS, can be an effective tool to directly determine the
relative strength and momentum dependence of the electron-phonon coupling in
condensed matter systems. Using a diagrammatic approach for an 8-band model of
copper oxides, we study the contributions from the lowest order diagrams to the
full RIXS intensity for a realistic scattering geometry, accounting for matrix
element effects in the scattering cross-section as well as the momentum
dependence of the electron-phonon coupling vertex. A detailed examination of
these maps offers a unique perspective into the characteristics of
electron-phonon coupling, which complements both neutron and non-resonant x-ray
scattering, as well as Raman and infrared conductivity.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
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